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Paperback The Treatise on Laws (Decretum DD. 1-20) with the Ordinary Gloss Book

ISBN: 081320786X

ISBN13: 9780813207865

The Treatise on Laws (Decretum DD. 1-20) with the Ordinary Gloss

(Part of the Studies in Medieval and Early Modern Canon Law Series)

An English translation of the first twenty distinctions of the Decretum. These distinctions discuss the nature of law, voluntary action, property rights, and the power of popes, bishops, and secular... This description may be from another edition of this product.

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Format: Paperback

Condition: New

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Customer Reviews

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Gratian's understanding of law

Gratian's contribution to jurisprudence cannot be underestimated. This selection of Gratian's work, translated into English, shows how Roman and canon law merged in the 12th century to create an even more vibrant and comprehensive view of the law and its function in human society. In fact, this may be the only extant English translation of Gratian's treatise on laws. This particular book is useful because it presents Gratian in much the same way that canonists and legal scholars would have read him from the High Middle Ages onward- surrounded by the standard gloss running around the sides of the main text. This form of commentary has since fallen out of fashion, but if you buy this book you will see why it was such a valuable way to carry on and develop the ideas in the main text. An invaluable addition to any lawyer's, judge's, canonist's, or philosopher's library.

A foundational work in the development of modern law

The Decretum or Harmony of Discordant Canons is a compilation of extracts from Church councils, Church fathers, and other ecclesiastical authorities. Compiled in the first half of the twelfth century by Gratian, probably a monk and teacher of canon law at the famous law school of Bologna, it remains one of the most important collections in the history of law. The first 20 sections, translated in this work, comprise a treatise on law in general and contain a discussion of the nature of law, voluntary action, and the power of popes, bishops, and secular authorities. Accompanying the text of Gratian is a translation of the so-called "Ordinary Gloss," a commentary on the text that took its final form in the 13th century and was usually found around the margins of the text, just as it is presented here. An introduction places the Treatise in its historical context, notes critical difficulties, and explains the methods of those who commented on it. This is the first English translation of a sizable part of the Decretum and will be of great interest not only to scholars and students of Church law, but also to students of secular law, theology, philosophy, history, and political theory.
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